The White House has struggled for months to decide whether Donald Trump will come up with an immigration plan of his own, or whether he’d wait to see what Congress came up with.
Yesterday, we learned that the president and his team have made a decision and have a blueprint in place. NBC News reported:
President Donald Trump said he will support a pathway to citizenship for 1.8 million undocumented immigrants who came to the U.S. as children, according to a telephone briefing by the White House for Republican congressional staff members. […]
The call, hosted by White House adviser Stephen Miller, outlined the demands for any deal on DACA, which includes a $25 billion “trust fund” for a border wall, an end to family reunification, also called “chain migration” by conservatives, and an end to the diversity visa lottery.
What emerges is a picture in which Trump accepts DACA protections for Dreamers — a goal the president has long claimed to support — and in exchange, Trump also gets effectively everything he and Republican hardliners want. It’s probably why Democrats responded to yesterday’s news by dismissing the White House package as a non-starter.
Would other Dreamer advocates, desperate for any kind of solution, consider Trump’s proposal? United We Dream’s Greisa Martinez Rosas said in a written statement late yesterday, “Let’s call this proposal for what it is: a white supremacist ransom note…. To Miller and Trump’s white supremacist proposal, immigrant youth say: No.”
This was obviously a hard-hitting sentiment, but it wasn’t the only voice of opposition. For the right, Trump’s proposal expands DACA eligibility, which is effectively conservative heresy. For the left, the president is trading Dreamers’ futures for an unreasonable right-wing wish list that, among other things, takes a regressive approach to legal immigration.
I’m especially intrigued, however, by the demands for $25 billion for Trump’s wall along the U.S./Mexico border.
A bipartisan Senate bill was prepared to endorse some funding for parts of a wall, but the president rejected the offer. Now it appears Trump is going much further, putting a $25 billion price tag on the project.
And while I suppose that’s not too surprising — he tweeted this week, “[I]f there is no Wall, there is no DACA” — let’s pause to note two relevant details.









